It's Washington Capitals hockey, all day, all night, all the time . . . or when I get around to it

Saturday, November 17, 2007

A NO point night: Lightning 5 - Caps 2

44 seconds.

That’s what it has come to…44 seconds. That’s how much time Caps fans had to cheer in last night’s 5-2 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning.That was the time in which the Capitals scored their two goals in this contest, the first from Brooks Laich on a deflection and the second on a wrist shot from Alex Ovechkin.

That was it.

The rest was a story of lack of ability…to kill penalties when they had to be killed, to finish plays when they had to be finished, and to make a smart play when a smart play was called for.

With respect to the first – killing penalties – Jeff Schultz was whistled for a cross checking foul 1:11 into the contest.It took the Lightning 20 seconds to capitalize as Vincent Lecavalier wired a slap shot off the post and behind goaltender Brent Johnson.The Caps, even when they would scramble to a lead later, were looking up at the Lightning for the rest of the night.

As to the second – finishing plays – the Caps had excellent scoring chances all night…

-There was the chance off a rebound of an Ovechkin drive that Viktor Kozlov had on his backhand with a yawning net and a sprawled goaltender in front of him…he couldn’t lift the puck over goalie Johan Holmqvist, and Holmqvist smothered it.

-There was Ovechkin circling into the zone with speed and the puck on his stick…after showing “slap shot” he changed his shooting angle and launched a shot over Holmqvist’s shoulder, but the goalie gloved it.

-There was Tomas Fleischmann, providing some effective forechecking, taking the puck away from Shane O’Brien and steering it to Viktor Kozlov circling out from behind the net.Kozlov could not steer the puck in from the top of the crease.

-There was Ovechkin, stealing a bouncing puck at the Tampa line just 15 seconds after the Lightning scored their 4th goal late in the second period.In alone on Holmqvist, he could not get the puck over the goalie’s left pad for the morale booster with five seconds left in the period.

-There was Kozlov in the high slot on a power play, taking a feed from the side board and in one motion sweeping a laser at Holmqvist, who sticked it away.

-There was Ovechkin, eight minutes into the third period, in the low left-wing corner sending a crisp pass to Nicklas Backstrom left alone in front.Backstrom fired at Holmqvist, who stopped the first shot and then the backhand by Chris Clark off the rebound.

Finally, there was the back-breaker of a play – another lapse in judgment.Barely 90 seconds after Ovechkin gave the Caps a 2-1 lead, Milan Jurcina collected a loose puck in front of Brent Johnson and circled into the right wing circle in his own zone.Looking to spring someone going the other way, he sent a pass up the middle of the ice.It was a play seen by Caps fans too often in the past by the likes of Sergei Gonchar, and much too often this year by…well, it could be anybody.It ended up on the stick of Jan Hlavac at the Caps’ line.Hlavac skated in and, using Shaone Morrisonn as a screen, snapped the puck far side over Johnson’s right pad.The play effectively ended Jurcina’s night.He skated two more shifts to close the first, then sat for the last 40 minutes without his blades touching the ice.

The line of the night belonged to, as it usually does these days, Alex Ovechkin…

29:40 in ice time

One goal (fourth game in a row with a goal)

Nine shots

Three hits

Three blocked shots, including two “saves” late when the Lightning were looking for the empty netter

Looking at that ice time – the fourth game in a row in which his ice time has increased – he’ll be spending goalie time out there in a few games.There are mutually reinforcing events happening here…Ovechkin gets more ice time – because he’s the only one producing reliably – the puck goes through him on just about every possession when he is on the ice, he takes most of the shots, and no one else is getting (or perhaps getting themselves) involved in the offense.Take away Ovechkin’s shots on goal last night, and the other 17 skaters had 21 shots on goal.Five of the 12 forwards had no shots on goal, including Chris Clark.

This isn’t selfishness on Ovechkin’s part, by any means.This is what the Caps have been reduced to on offense…Alex Ovechkin and…

If you’re looking for other rays of sunshine in this game, good luck.Viktor Kozlov had all those chances, but failed to convert any of them and finished -3.Mike Green ended up with some of the ice time that Jurcina forfeited and played well…almost 25 minutes, three shots on goal (including an excellent chance not described above), three blocked shots.He was -1, but that was the empty netter at the end.After that…

…the Caps still find themselves 6-12-1.That is a pace for 56 points.If that is what they finish with, it will be the fewest points they earned since the 52 they earned in the 1994-1995 season.

3 comments:

As Barry Melrose would inanely say: "your best players have to be your best players". Surely Ovechkin has carried his weight and then some, so no problems there. The problem is, after AO the Caps don't really have any more "best players" to carry the burden. Which is why Ovechkin gets more and more icetime and inherently has more pressure to produce more.

I worry that the management is feeling a little heat (as they should) and might try to rush Alex Semin back again. Obviously the Caps need a healthy and dangerous Semin, but as we've learned it's impossible to rush this injury.

On top of that, I think Semin will be feeling the pressure of just signing a pretty huge contract to get out there sooner than he should....A ankle sprain isn't the most serious injury--it won't ruin a career, but it could certainly ground a season.

Hopefully GMGM, Hanlon and Semin will all be very prudent in when he comes back. All have much to lose, which is why I fear he might come back to soon.

And if he comes back, and the Caps are still struggling, then what? At that point I think you have to make a coaching change, if only to shake things up a little. Look at what teams like St. Louis, Columbus and Atlanta have done in the past year after changing coaches. All, I believe, are above .500 since the switch.

The story of the game was missed chances and dumb blunders. I'm wary of jumping in with the 'fire Hanlon' crowd, but if these guys can't get a win at home against Florida on Monday, I think something drastic needs to be done.

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The Washington Capitals ended the 2016-2017 as one of 12 franchises in the NHL never to win a Stanley Cup. Of that group, only the St. Louis Blues (48 seasons), Buffalo Sabres (45 seasons), and Vancouver Canucks (45 seasons) have gone longer never having won a Cup than the Capitals (41 seasons). Six teams came into the league after the Capitals entered the league in 1974-1975 and have won Stanley Cups: Colorado Rockies/New Jersey Devils (1976-1977), Edmonton Oilers (1979-1980), Quebec Nordiques/Colorado Avalanche (1979-1980), Hartford Whalers/Carolina Hurricanes (1979-1980), Tampa Bay Lightning (1992-1993), and the Anaheim Ducks (1993-1994).

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